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Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1843-06-01

Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1843-06-01 page 1

FAT JOURNAL. ; , ; . VOLUME VI. CO LUMBUS, THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1843 NUMBER 250. E PUBLISHED ON TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS AND SATURDAYS, BY CHARLES SCOTT. Okkice corner or High and Town streets, Buttles' Building. TERMS. Daily during the session of the Legislature, and tri-weekly the remainder of the year, . . . $5 00 Tri-weekly per annum 4 00 Weekly per annum 2 60 b!jsinesscards. W. & K. THOMAS, ATTORNEYS and Counselors at Law, Columbus, Ohio, will attend to the business of their profession in Franklin and the adjoining counties. Office on High street, opposite the Franklin Hank, up stairs. August 3. ELIJAH U At Kl , ATTORNEY at Law, Columbus, Ohio, will attend to any business that may be entrusted to his charge in any of th Courts in this Slate. Office on High street, over Burchstead & Richardson's shoe store. Dec. 1841. pi:itiir & ii:s.mso, ATTORNEYS and Counsellors at Law, Columbus, Ohio, will attend to business entrusted to their care, in Franklin and adjoining counties. Office in the rear of the Clinton Bank, Stale street. July 9, 181. WAIiTEK TIIKALL, ATTORNEY at Law and Solicitor in Chancery. Office on the East side of High street, second door Souili of Mr. Brooks' Hole!. December 2, 1841. ATTORNEY at Law, Columbus, Ohio. Office on High street, opposile Oyler's Hotel, third door south of the store of Preston & Co., up stairs. Dec. 9. 1IAICVI.V V SUIHUKT, BOOK BINDERS, Herancnurt & Ambos's new building, up stairs, High street, opposile the public offices. John A. Harvey. marl7 Vm. Seibert. llAISIMVAItli, Ac. BUTTLES & RUN YON, Importers of Foreign Hard-ware, and Dealers in Military Goods, Iron, Nails, Glass, Saddlers' Trimmings, Tinware, Tinners' Findings, &c, &c, High street, sign ol the Gilt Pad-Lock, Columbus, Ohio. I. IV. WHITING & HUNTINGTON, BOOKSELLERS and Stationers, next door to the Clinton Bank, High street, Columbus, Ohio. A large assortment of Hooks and Slationery always on hand. JOHN WALTON, CHAIR Maker, High street, a few doors Soulh of the Mechanics' Hall. A good assortment of Chairs will always be found at this establishment. BOOKSl'OKIi AND BINHKRY. CMATTOON, Bookseller and Stationer, and Bookbinder, State slreel, opposite the Stale House. A general assortment of.Books and Stationery always on hand. Book binding of every description, executed on short notice. ISIOIIY W. UKRIIV, DEALER in Law, Theological, Classical, Miscellaneous and School Hooks ; also, Blank liooks and Slationery, opposite the State House, Columbus, Ohio. I AV &- HI I, HO I KMC, DEALERS in Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Leather, Boots and Shoes, &.C., High street, Columbus, Ohio. Oct. 1. 1841. ltl'liOV, WORK X ItWOV, DEALERS in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Carpct-peting, Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Nails, Glass, Ate, High street, opposite the Slate House, Columbus, Ohio. IIFi;S & SHELDON, FASHIONABLE TAILORS, High si., first door south of V. B. Brooks' Grocery, and directly opposite the new building of the Mechanics' Beneficial Society. IB. (JOIUSTOCK & CO. FORWARDING and Commission Merchants, and Produce Dealers, Canal Basin, Columbus, Ohio. O. W. SHERWOOU V CO., GROCERS and Produce Dealers, High street, at Burr, Gregory & Burr's old stand. All kinds of Groceries at wholesale and retail. Produce of all kinds purchased. COPPER ANI TIN WARE, Arc. GEO. J. PUG1I, Copper, Tin and Sheet Iron Ware Manufacturer, High street, near Town. A good assortment of Ware always on hand. .1. KIRGWAY & CO.'S "IPniV rniT'lHV ltrnnrl stri'nt near the Rride'e. Colum- X bus, Ohio. Stoves of all kinds, and a great variety of Castings, always on hand. Oct. 1, 1841. COI.UiTIRUS HAT STORE. JE. RUDISILL, High street, second door south of the Insurance Company's building, always keeps on hand a good assortment of Hals and Caps, of the latest fashions. Hats made to order. SOAP ANO CANIH.E FACTORY. TOHN FUNSTON. Soulh Columbus, near the New Court J House, manufactures and keeps on hand every variety of Koap and Candles, ami sells at wholesale ana reiau. WILLIAM BUKOELL, MERCHANT Tailor, in the Neil House, keeps on hand a good assortment of Cloths and Trimmings. Also, all descriptions of Clothing kept on hand, and made promptly to order. DOCTOR J. HAWLEY'S OFFICE and residence on the corner of High and Friend streets. Doct. Hawlky would receive in his office one or more students of Medicine. April 19. .dtf. t I HUH AN HOWELL, SADDLERS, Harness and Trunk Makers, High street, one door Soulh of tho Franklin Bank. Every description nf nplinlno in llllli. lillO nlulVC nn hlliul. FIRE ! THE undersigned, agent of the VElna Insurance company of Hartford, Connecticut, will insure against loss or da-maec by fire on the most liberal terms Nov. 21, 1812. .Cmd E. BACKUS. NEIL HOUSE. THE subscriber having taken the abovo House for a term of years, and furnished it in good style, flatters himself that by strict attention to the comfort of'lns guests, he will merit a share of the public patronage. . Columbus, July 1, 1842. R. B. COWLES. CORNELIUS WALKE, M. 1 TENDERS his services to the citizens of Columbus and vicinity, as Physician and Surgeon. TJ Office, on High street, Mechanics' Institute Building, up stairs. July 5, 1842. .dtf Vorwnrding, Commiion anil Produce II unities. THE subscriber will continue the Forwarding, Commission and Produce business on his own account, nt the warehouse lately occupied by Gregory, Burr & Co.; and will contract to ship Merchandise and Produce to the Eastern cities. Columbus, May 11, 1841. C. G. SHEFFIELD. STONE As TO WNSEN l, WHOLESALE and Retail Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, opposite the Franklin Bank, Columbus, Ohio. June 23, 1842. AIDS TO REFLECTION. Aids to Reflection. By Samuel Taylor Coleridge. With the Author's last Corrections. Edited by Henry Nelson Coleridge, Esq., M. A. To which is prefixed A Preliminary Essay. By John M'Vick ar, D. D., Professor of Moral Philosophy, in Columbia College. Third Edition, Revised and Corrected. 1 vol. 12mo, Price gl 25. For sale at the Borkstore of April 11. I. N. WHITING &, HUNTINGTON. AMERICAN ALMANAC for tho Year 1843, just received by dec20 I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. TJULWEll'S NEW NOVEL. Tho Lost of the 5 JJ Uarons. By Sir E. L. Bulwer, Author of " Zanom." "Rienzi," "Ernest Maltravers," "Alice," &c. Price 25 cents. This day received at DERBY'S Bookstore. . February 28 1843. BIANCA CAPPKiXO. An Historical Romance' By Lady Lyllnn Bulwer. First American Edition-complete from the London Edition. In three volumes. Just received at DERBY'S Bookstore. Feb. 6. BOOTS ANI SHOES. 25 cases Men's Calf, Kip and Thick Boots. Also 50 cases of Shoes, a general assortment. Just received and for sale by August 18. FAY, KILBOURNE & CO. BOIriNG t I.OTII. McCOY, WORK & Mc-COY have been appointed agents for the sale of genuine Het Anker Bolting Clolhs, of warranted quality, which they will sell at New York prices. July 5. BIN1EK8 ItOAHDS. 4,000 Lbs. Binders' Boardi a good article for sale cheap by BUTTLES & RUNYON, January 14. 1843. Sign of the Gill Pad-Lock. MHAKIiUS O'lHAIiliEY. Adventures of Cliasrle J Malley, the Irish Dragoon, ust received by feblO I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. DWELLING HOUSE FOll KENT. Oneofllie "Eight Buildings," on Town street, is for rent on moderate terms. It is well suited for a large boarding house. For further particulars apply at the Slate Journal counting room. April 6. D'AUISIUNE'S KEEOKITIATION. History oj the Great Reformation of the Sixteenth Century, in Germany, Switzerland. &c. By J. H. Merle D'Aubigne. A new supply just received and for sale at jan"24 DERBY'S Book Store. D It. ITIOTT'S TKAVHI.S. Travels in Europe and the East, embracing Observations ninde during a Tour llirniltrli mrtct fifth, ni mill ric nf Pnrmn ITinriil A.i. 1V11,.. &.c, &c., during the years 1834 to 1841. By Valentine Molt, M. I)., President of the Medical Faculty of the University of New York, and Professor of Surgery, &c. &c; in 1 vol.Bvo. just received and for sale by may4 I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. DRV GOODS. McCOY, WORK &. McCOY offer for sale at their old stand, opposile the State House, a large assortment of Fancy and Staple Dry Goods. Jy 5. DRUGS AND MEDICINES, OILS, PAINTS, &c The subscribers have just received a large addition to their stock of Drugs, Medicines, Oils, Paints, &c., which they olTer at wholesale and retail, on Iho most accommodating terms. aug 4 FAY, KILBOURNE & CO. FLOUR. The undersigned have made arrangements for a constant supply of the best Family Flour, which will be sold at a bare commission over cost for Cash. If charged to account 12 cents per barrel will be added to the Cash price. O. W. SHERWOOD & CO. February 17, 1813 FRESH OYSTERS, DIRECT from BALTIMORE just received at the BASEMENT OF THE AMER CAN HOTEL. Orders from the countrv, attended with the Cash, will be promptly filled. VM. KELSEY. Columbus, October 1, 1842. IRESH l'RUIT. 25 Boxes Raisins; 25 quarter do. . lo. ; just received and for sale by November 29, 1842. O. W. SHERWOOD & CO. F OR SALE Pews No. 53 in the Episcopal Church ami w m uie uaptist Clmrcii, on easy terms. October 19, 1842. B. COMSTOCK & CO. FRENCH REVOLUTION. A History of tho French Revolution. By Thomas Carly e. 2 vols. 12mo. 2d Edilion. Just received by Nov. 12. I. N. WHITING te HUNTINGTON. HAIR CUTTING. Hnir Cut nt prices to Niiil ihe times. The undersigned will try to pleaso all that mpy favor him with their custom, at his residence at the foot of Stale street, ou the Wharf. Jan. 28. D. S. DOHERTY. HAKRISON'S UIGEST, Vol. 4. Just published by the subscribers, a Digest of Cases determined in the House of Lords, the several Courts of Common Law, the Court of Bankruptcy, and also the Crown Cases Reserved 5 together with a full selection of Equity Cases, Vol.4, completing the work from 1756 to 1810. The 4th volume, or sets in 4 olumcs, for sale at moderate prices, by T. & J. W. JOHNSON, Law Booksellers, No. 5, Minor st. Philadelphia. April 28, 1842. INSURANCE. Losses by Fire or Water insured against upon liberal terms, by the long established and well known Protection Insurance Company of the city of Hartford, Connecticut. E. ROHHINS, Gen. Agent, Cincinnati. Jan. 25. M. J. GILBERT, Agent, Columbus. IMPORTANT to Merehnnt nud Traders. For sale, very cheap, at DERBY'S Bookstore, a large assortment ol Blank Work, consisting of medium, deini and cap Legcrs and Journals, bound in Russia and plain sheep; Cash, Invoice, and Day Books, in bolh full and half binding. March 24. II AMES' LAST. Forest Horn. A Romance of Old Times. By G. P. R. James, Esq., Author of " Mor-ley Ernslein," " The Jacquerie," ' The Robber," " Ancient Regime," &.c. Price 25 cents. Just received at DERHY'S Bookstore. March 4, 1843. JAMES' NEW NOVEL. The Jacquerie A Novel. By G. P. R. James, Esq., Author of " The Robber," " The Ancient Regime," etc., etc. In 2 vols. Just received at the Bookstore of Ieb7 I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. UST RECEIVER At DERRY'S Bookstore The Neighbors 1 A Story of Every Day Life By Frederi-ka Breincr. Translated by Mary Howilt. Price 25 Cents. December 10, 1842. I AIll OIL. B. Comstock & Co.'s manufacture of J Lard Oil winter strained for sale by January 14, 1843. BUTTLES &. RUNYON. AST OF THE RAIIONS 35 Cents Buhvcr's new Novel, being No. 13 of Harper's Library of Select Novels, handsomely bound in French covers, at newspaper prices, just receivea iiy mar 13 I. N. YV HITING & HUNTINGTON. LIVES of tho Queens of England, from the Norman Conquest, with anecdotes of their Courts, in 3 vols, by Agnes Stick land. Memoirs of Margaret Davidson, by Washington Irving. Poetical Remains of the late Lucrctia Maria Davidson, with a Biography, by Miss Sedgwick, 111 1 volume. For sale at the Bookstore of dec 22 I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON MARY, O.UEEN OF SCOTS. Letters and Docu nients connected with Her Personal History, now first published ; with an introduction, by Agnes Strickland, Au thor of the "Lives of the Queens of England." Price 25 cents. Sold at DERBY'S. Dec. 12, 1842. MARTIN'S BIBLE ILLUSTRATIONS A Splendid Series of Designs Illustrative of the Bible. Accompanied with passages from the Sacred Text. A truly elegant volume, folio size, elegantly bound in Cloth. For sale at DERBY'S Bookstore. Dec. 30. MACHINE CAHI. The subscribers have for sale, 50 setts Machine Cards, fancy and plain set, Nos. 30, 31, 32, 33, and 34, wire ; also, Filleting Cards ; manufactured at Leicester, Massachusetts. February 14, 1813. FAY & KILBOURNE. MEMOIRS of the queens of France; with noti ces of die Royal Favorites. By Mrs. Forbes Bush. Complete from the London Edition, in two volumes. Price 31 cenls. Sold at DERBY'S Bookstore. December 21, 1842. MESMERISM. Facts in Mesmerism, with reasons for a dispassionate enquiry into it. By the Rev. Chauncy Hare Townshend, A. M. A new supply at Ihe Bookstore of Nov. 3. I. N. WHITING &, 'HUNTINGTON. ILL AND CROSS-CUT SAWS. FAY, KILBOURNE & CtX keep a constant supply of Row-land's Mill and Cross-Cut Saws, at the lowest prrcos. jun8 NAILS AND GLASS. FAY, KILBOURNE & CO. have for sale 200 kegs Juniata Nails ; 200 boxes 8 by 10 and 10 by 12 Glass. They also keep a constant supply of the larger sizes of Glass, from 10 by 14 to 16 by 22. June 8 s WAIM'S PANACEA AND VERMIFUGE For sale by fjuly 24 FAY, KILBOURNE or. CO. PORTRAIT PAINTING. WM. WAI.CUTTwill remain through the winter in Columbus. He invites the public to call and examine his specimens at his room, or Town street. North side, first brick East of High street. December 19, 1812. .llf. PETERS' KEPORTS. The 16th volume of Peters' Reports bding cases argued and adjudged in the Supreme Court of tbe United States, January Term, 1842 for sale by 1. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. December 3, 112. I1EMOVAL.-0 W. SHERWOOD has removed to A. the Store lately occupied by the firm of Gregory, Burr & Co., on High street, 2 doors South of the Franklin Bank. April 5, 18f2. STORY ON PARTNERSHIP. Commentaries on the Law of Paitnership as a branch of Commercial and Maratime Jurisprudence with occasional illustrations from the Civil and Foreign Law. By Joseph Story, L. L. D. Just received and for sale by t T. & J. W. JOHNSON, Philadelphia, Jan.7, 1842. .dtf. No. 5 Minor street. TEPIIENS' NEW WORK. Incidents of Travel in Yucatan, by John L. Stephens, author of Incidents of Travel in Central Ami, ica, Chiapas, and Yucatan, illustrated by 120 engravings in iwo larji; vols., just received by april 18 1. Ni WHITING &. HUNTINGTON. STORV ON PARTNEKS9IIP. Commentaries on the Law of partnership as a branch of Commercial and Maratime Jurisprudence with occasional illustrations from the Civil and Foreign Law. By Joseph Story, L. L. D. 1 vol. 8vo. Just received and for sale by Dec. 3. I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. STEPHENS' NEW WOKIt. Incidents of Travel in Vucatan. By John L. Stevens, author of Incidents of Travel in Ccnlral America, Chiapas and Yucatan, etc. Illustrated by 120 engravings. In two largo volumes, This day received at DEKBY'S BOOKSTORE. April 5. THE CUPOLA, or Rhymes on IemngoKes and Politicians : Part First ; written by a retired Politician, and edited by Erasmus Evergreen, Esq. Just published and for sale at the Bookstore of January 12, 1843. HENRY W. DERBY. THE NAUTILI'S. Select Nautical Tales and Sea Sketches, with an authentic narrative of Ihe mutiny on the Somcrs. Just received and sold at DERBY'S Bookstore. January lfi, 1813. TANNERS' J L.-quality, for sale by October 2. -25 bbls. Tanners' Oil, of the best FAY, KILBOURNE & CO. THE ARAMS' LETTERS. Letters of Mrs. Adams, wife of John Adams ; with an Introductory Memoir. By her grandson, Charles Francis Ada-ins. 2vols.l2mo. Also, the Letters of John Adams addressed to his wife. By the same. 2 vols. 12mo. For sale at the Bookstore of Nov. 12. I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. TOWN LOTS. For sale or lease for a term of years, filly very desirable Lots in the City of Columbus. Enquire of mar 10 BRUSH & GILBERT. w ING ANR WING Cooper's Last Novel, in 2 vol limes, for 50 cents. Waverly Novels neatly put up at 25 cents each. Vivian Grey- &c, at the same price. Just received by Dec. 31. I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. WHEAT WANTEB. The subscribers will pay the highest market price for Wheat, delivered at their Ware-House int city of Columbus. Jluy 29, -1842. II. COMSTOCK & CO. WINTER STRAINER LAMP OIL. Fay, Kil-boure & Co. have for sale 400 gallons ofwinter strained Lamp Oil. Oct. 13, 1841. WHEAT WANTED. .10,000 Bushels of Wheat wanted, for which the highest market price, in specie paying funds, will be paid, by SALMON THOMAS. July 18. 18l2..wlf. A C BBLS. Camwood ; 30 Bbls. Logwood ; 41U 30 " Fustic; 20 " Nic'wood; fi " Alum; 6 " Copperas; 2000 lbs. Madder ; 300 lbs. Indigo ; 11X10 " Blue Vitriol, Oil Vitriol, and Clothiers' Press Papers for sale by FAY, KILBOURNE & CO THE Complete Census of Ohio for 1S40, in connection with the Oiiio Gazetteer, and Traveler's Guide. This edition of the Ohio Gazetteer contains a full description of the several Towns, Townships, and Counties, with their Water Courses, Roads, Improvements, Mineral productions, &c., etc. ; together with an Appendix or General Kegisler, embracing Tables of Roads and Distances, of Post Offices, their location and distance from the Capital of the slate, auci ol the United states; ol Works ol internal improvement; of the several Officers of the Slate, their residence, &c: of the Colleges, and their officer" of linuiu their officers and capital, oVc , ice Revised Edition. With a second Appendix, conlaininr the full Census ol the State for 1840, as taken by order of Congress; in one very large super royal lmo. volume ol 01U pages. The following is one among the numerous favorable notice which have been irivcn of this edition of the Gazetlecr : " The above is the title of a very valuable duodecimo work of 578 pages, a good idea of which may be gathered from the title. Mr. Jenkins has made the best use of the first rate fa- ...i.:..u ... nir..-.l., 1,;... n, ,l. ti..i ' r!n..n...mn..i uiliiius wiuii! ntic oiiuiiku 111111 at uiv otm in v.u v 1.1 111111.11., and has produced a Gazetteer far superior, both generally and particularly, to any other wc have ever seen pertaining to an individual'Slate. Every teacher, lawyer, physician, larmer, mechanic or mcrchanj. should provicfc himself with a copy, and use it as he would his watch, as his business requires. The Appendix alone is worth the price of the whole work, for the valuable statistics it contains." For sale, by the dozen or single copy, nt the Bookstore of dec22 I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. DR. GOODE'S CELEBRATED FEMALE PILLS. These pills arc strongly recommended to the notice of the Ladies as a safe and eflicienl remedy in remov ing those complaints peculiar to their sex, Irom want ol i.xcr-cisc, or general Debility of the System, Obstructions, Suppressions, and Irregularity of the Menses ; at Ihe same time strengthening, cleansing, and giving tone to the Stomach and Bowels, and producing a new and healthy action throughout the system generally. They create Appetite, correct Indigestion, remove Giddiness and Nervous Headache, and are eminently useful in those Flatulent Complaints which distress 1-emales so much at me " 1 urn of L.1FE. ' 1 licy olivialc Costivcuess, and counteract all Hysterical and Nervous Affections, likewise afford soothing and permanent relief in Fluor Albus, or Whites, and in the most obstinate cases ot Chlorosis, or Green sickness, they invariably restore the pal lid and delicate female to health and vigor. These Pills have gained the sanction and approbation of the most eminent Physicians in the United States, and many mothers can imewisc testily to tneir extraoruinary cnicacy, To marnea lemaies, wnose expectations oi me tencieresi pieog. es of connubial happiness have been defeated, these Pills may be truly esteemed a blissful boon. They soon renovate all functional debility, and if taken, (according to directions,) obviate all morbid action. A medium thus safe and efficacious, will be found in DR. GOODE'S CELEBRATED FEMALE PILLS. These Pills are of Iwo kinds, namely: No. 1, or Laxative Pills, and No. 2, or Restorative Pills. They are for all the following diseases : suppression, Irregularity or Retention of the Menses, Fluor Albus, Chlorosis or Green Sickness. Cos- tiveness, Gravel, Incontinence of Urine, Nervous Afl'ections, Hysterics, Prolapsus Uteri, or tailing ol the Womb, and Piles. These Pills are also particularly adapted to the male as well as the female sex, for the cure of the following diseases: Nervous Diseases, Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Bilious Diseases, and all cases of Hypochondriacism, Low Spirits, Palpitation of the Heart, Nervous Irritability, Nervous Weakness, Indigestion, Loss of Appetite, Heartburn, General Debility. Bodily Weakness or Flatulency, Headaches. Night mare, Rheumatism, Asthma, Tic Douloureux, Cramp, Spasmodic Affections, and those who are victims to that most excruciating disorder Gout; also, Pains in the Side,Chost, Limbs, Head, Stomach or Back, Dimness or Confusion of Sight, Alternate flushes of Heat and Chilliness, Tremors, Watchings, Aguauon, Anxiety, oaa ureunis snu opasms. This Medicine is acknowledged to be one of the most valua ble ever discovered, as a purifier of the blood and fluids. It is superior to Sarsaparilla, whether as a sudorific or alterative, The above valuable medicine is for sale by J. B. WH EATON, FAY &, KILBOURNE, and DENIG & SON, Columbus, Ohio. rebruary Sio, 1B. Woman nnd Marriage By Washington Irving. I have speculated a great deal upon matrimony. I have seen young and beautiful women, the pride of gay circles, married as the world says well ! Some have moved into costly houses, and their friends have all come and looked at their furniture, and their splendid arrangement for happiness, and they have gone away and committed them to their sunny hopes cheerfully without fear. It is natural for the young to be sanguine, and at such times I am carried away by similar feelings. I love to get unobserved into a corner, and watch the bride in her white attire and with her smiling face and her soft eyes moving before me in the pride of life, weave a waking dream of her future happiness, and persuade myself that it will be true. I think how they will sit upon the luxurious sofa, as the twilight falls, and build gay hopes and murmur in love tones the now unforbidden tenderness, and how thrillingly the allowed kiss, and the beautiful endearments of wedded life, will make even that parting joyous, and how gladly they will come back from the crowd and the empty mirth of the gay to each other's quiet company. I picture to myself that young creature, who blushes even now, at his hesitating caress, listening eagerly for his foot steps as the night steals on, and wishing that he would come, and when he enters at last, and with an affection as undying as his pulse, folds her to his arms, I can feel the very tide flowing through his heart, and gaze with him on her graceful form, as she moves about him for the kind offices of affection, soothing all his unquiet cares, and making him forget even himself, in her young and unshadowing beauty. I go forward for years, and see her luxuriant hair put soberly away from her brow, and her girlish graces ripen into dignity, and her bright loveliness chastened with the gentle meekness of maternal affection. Her husband looks on her with a proud eye, and shows her the same fervent love and delicate attention which first won her; and children are growing up about them, and go on full of honor and untroubled years, and are remembered when they die ! I say I love to dream thus when I go to give the young bride joy. It is the natural tendency of feeling touched by loveliness, that fears nothing for itself, and if ever I yield to darker feelings, it is because the light of the picture is changed. I am not fond of dwelling upon such changes, and I will not, minutely, now. I allude to it only because I trust that my simple pnge will be read by some of the young and beautiful beings who move daily across my path, and I would whisper to them, as they glide by, joyously and confidently, the secret of an unclouded future. The picture I have drawn above is not peculiar. It is colored like the fancies of the bride ; and many, oh ! many an hour will she sit, with her jewels lying loose in her fingers, and dream such dreams as these. She believes them, too and she goes on for a w hile, undeceived. The evening is not too long while they talk of plans for happiness, and the quiet meal is still pleasant with the delightful novelty of mutual reliance and attention. There comes soon, however, a time when personal topics become bare and wearisome, and slight attentions will not alone keep up the social excitement. There are long intervals of silence, and detected symptoms of weariness, and the husband, first, in his manhood, breaks in upon the hours they were to spend together. I cannot follow it circumstantially. Then comes long hours of unhappy restlessness, and terrible misgivings of each other's worth and affection, till, by and by, they can conceal their uneasiness no longer, and go out separately to seek relief, and lean upon a hollow world for the support which one who was their lover and friend could not give them ! Heed this, ye who are winning by your innocent beauty, the affections of high minded and thinking beings! Remember that he will giveupthebiother of his heart with whom he has had, ever, a fellowship of mind the society of his cotemporary runners in the race of fame, who have held him with a stern companionship and often, in his passionate love, will break away from the arena of his burning ambition, to come to listen to the " voice of the charmer." It will bewilder him at first, but it will not be long, and then think you that an idle bland ishment will chain the mind that has been used, tor years, to equal communication ? Think you he will give up, for a weak dalliance the animated themes of men, and the search into the mysteries of knowledge! Oh! no, lady! believe me no! Trust not your influence to such light fetters! Credit not the old fashioned absurdity, that woman's is a secondary lot ministering to the necessities of her lord and master! It is a higher destiny that I would award vou. If your immortality is as complete and your gift of mind is as capable as ours, 1 would put no wisdom of mine against "God's allotment. I would charge you to water the undying bud, and give it a healthy culture, and open its beauty to the sun, and then you may hope that when your life is bound with another, you will go on equally, and in a fellowship that shall pervade every earthly interest. I)ciiNC not Small Beginnings. It is related in the Gentlemen's Magazine, of (Jhantry, the celebrated sculptor, that, when a boy, he was observed by a gentleman in the neighborhood of Sheffield, very attentively engaged in cutting a stick with a penknife. Ho asked the lad what he was doing : when, with great simplicity of manner, but with courtesy, he replied, "I am cutting old Fox s head, rox was the schoolmaster of the vil lage. On this, the gentleman asked to see what he had done; and pronounced it to be an excellent likeness, and presented the youth with a sixpence. And this may be reckoned the first money Chantry ever received for the production ot his art. This anecdoto is but one of a thousand that might be cited of many different men, who, from small be-ciiininirs, rose to irreat stations and influence, and shows the importance of not despising the day of small things, in any condition or circumstances ot lite. All nature, in tact, is mil or insiruciive lessons on this point, which it would be well for us more thorourrhlv to study and appreciate. The river, rolling onward its accumulated waters to the ocean, was, in its small beginning, out an ooz ing rill, trickling down a small moss-covered rock, and windinir, like a silver thread, between the green banks to which It imparted verdure. The tree, that sweeps the air with its hundred branches, and mocks at the howling tempest, was, in its small beginning, but a little seed, trodden under toot and unnoticed then a small shoot, that the leaping hare might have forever crushed. Evcrvthine around us tells us not to despise small beginnings ; tor they are the lower rounds ot a lad der that leads to great results, and we must step upon these before we can ascend higher. Despise not small beginnings of wealth. The Rothschilds, Girard, Astor, and most of the richest men, began with small means. From cents, they proceeded to dollars ; from hundreds to thousands; from thousands to millions. Had they neglected these first earnings had they said within themselves, what is the use of saving these few cents? they are not of much value, and I will just spend them, and enjoy myself as I go they would never have risen to the wealthiest among their fellows. It is only by the economical husbanding of small means that they increase to large sums. It is the hardest part of success to gain a little ; that little once gained, more will easily follow. Despise not small beginnings of education. Franklin had but little early education ; yet look at what he became, and how he is now reverenced. Ferguson feeding his sheep on the hills of Scotland, picked up merely the rudiments of learning, but subsequently arose to be one of the first astronomers in 1'iurope. tlerschcl, also, the great astronomer, was in his youth a drummer boy to a marching regiment, and received but little more than a drummer boy's education ; but his name is now associated with tho brightest discoveries of science, and is borne by the planet which his zeal discovered. A host of in stances rise up to testify that, by properly improving the small and perhaps imperiect beginnings ol knowledge, they may become as foundation stones of a temple of learning, which the future shall gaze upon and admire. A man can scarcely be too avaricious in the ac quisition of knowledge; he should hoard up his in tellectual gains with the utmost assiduity and diligence ; but, unlike the lucre-seeking miser, must put out his knowledge to usury, and, by lending out his stock to others, increase by this commerce of his thought, his capital, until his one talent shall have become five, and his five have gained to them other five. Despise not the small beginings of fame or honor. The fame which springs up on a sudden, like the mushroom plant, is seldom lasting. True fame and honor are of slow, but generally sure growth, ascending by degrees from the lowest offices to the highest stations from the regard of a few, to the applause of a nation. But he who despises the lower steps of honor, because they are low, will seldom reach the higher; and he who spurns at the commendations of his own circle, as too small a thing to seek after, will never secure the esteem and renown of a Slate or a kingdom. Despise not small beginnings of error. The walls of a castle have been undermined by the burrowing of small and despised animals; and the beginning of error, though at first unheeded, will soon, if not checked, sap the foundations of truth, and build up his own wretched dogmas on its ruins. All first errors are small ; despise them not, they will soon increase to great ones, and perhaps devastate soeiety. Savannah Rep. Theory or Marriage. There was a merrv fel low who supped with Plato three thousand years ago, and the conversation turned upon love and the choice of wives. He said, "he had learned from a very early tradition that man was created male and female, wan a uupucaie sei oi nmos, ana periormea nis locomotive functions with a kind of rotary movement as a wheel; that he became in consequence so excessively insolent that Jupiter, indignant, split him in two; that since that time each runs about the world in quest of his other half; if the two congenial halves meet they are a very loving couple; otherwise they are subject to a miserable, scolding, peevish, and uncongenial matrimony. The search he said was ren dered difficult, tor the reason that one man alighted upon a half that did not belong to him, another did necessarily the same, till the whole affair was thrown into irretrievable confusion." American Watches. Our Connecticut friends have hitherto been famous for the manufacture of wooden Clocks; but from this useful business they have advanced to making Gold Lever Watches com plete, of the very best character. Our neighbor Doct. Crane has been presented with one by a friend, that really appears to be equal in workmanship and beauty to anything of the kind we ever witnessed. It is a gold detached Lever, made by Mr. John Pitkin of East Hartford, Conn, with two extrajewels. Our YValchmaKers say the movements are not excelled by any brought into this country from Europe. The business has been extensively carried on at Hartford for a year or two past, but so powerful is the prejudice C IT n 1- L IIT...I .1. . .. in iavor oi riUgusu vv atcnes, iiiai n is our, recently Mr. P. has felt encouraged to push them forward with the Hartford stamp. Cincinnati Gazette. Corn Stalk Syrup. We have before us an article of Corn Stalk Syrup, which is equal, in every respect, to the best molasses. It was left at our office by Col. John S. Thomas, of this county. The process of manufacturing, we learn, was of the simplest character. The corn stalks were cut up, beaten in a trough, and then thrown into a common cider press the juices of the stalk then underwent boiling, &c, and the syrup is thus made. Our planters without exception, should prepare to make this syrup if not for a market, at least for their own home consumption. The sample before us was made in South Carolinia. The stalks from an acre of land, it is said, will produce about 90 gallons. Milledgeville (Ga.) Journal. The Comet of 1843. M. Arago's account. The Philadelphia Inquirer publishes a translation, by Mr. W. B. Hill, of M. Arago's notice of the recent Comet. It appears according to Arago and the French astronomers, that the Comet only just grazed the Sun, and in the London Times of the 14th of April, Encke states that he has found an impossible orbit, viz: one in which the Comet would have to strike the Sun in a direction passing one third of the way to the centre.Mr. Kendall, the principal of the Philadelphia High School, and other learned gentlemen, have given the Comet a great deal of attention, and they, previous to the receipt of the report of M. Arago,s statement, had determined, by calculation, that the Comet must have hit the Sun. The coincidence of astronomers in Philadelphia, London, and Paris arriving at such a result, is certainly very strong, if not conclusive evidence. The curious circumstance of the Comet running against the Sun, and being thrown off, is a hard thing to believe. Baltimore Puiriot. It has been aptly said that a false friend is like a shadow on a dial appearing in clear weather, but vanishing as soon as it is thudy !

FAT JOURNAL. ; , ; . VOLUME VI. CO LUMBUS, THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1843 NUMBER 250. E PUBLISHED ON TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS AND SATURDAYS, BY CHARLES SCOTT. Okkice corner or High and Town streets, Buttles' Building. TERMS. Daily during the session of the Legislature, and tri-weekly the remainder of the year, . . . $5 00 Tri-weekly per annum 4 00 Weekly per annum 2 60 b!jsinesscards. W. & K. THOMAS, ATTORNEYS and Counselors at Law, Columbus, Ohio, will attend to the business of their profession in Franklin and the adjoining counties. Office on High street, opposite the Franklin Hank, up stairs. August 3. ELIJAH U At Kl , ATTORNEY at Law, Columbus, Ohio, will attend to any business that may be entrusted to his charge in any of th Courts in this Slate. Office on High street, over Burchstead & Richardson's shoe store. Dec. 1841. pi:itiir & ii:s.mso, ATTORNEYS and Counsellors at Law, Columbus, Ohio, will attend to business entrusted to their care, in Franklin and adjoining counties. Office in the rear of the Clinton Bank, Stale street. July 9, 181. WAIiTEK TIIKALL, ATTORNEY at Law and Solicitor in Chancery. Office on the East side of High street, second door Souili of Mr. Brooks' Hole!. December 2, 1841. ATTORNEY at Law, Columbus, Ohio. Office on High street, opposile Oyler's Hotel, third door south of the store of Preston & Co., up stairs. Dec. 9. 1IAICVI.V V SUIHUKT, BOOK BINDERS, Herancnurt & Ambos's new building, up stairs, High street, opposile the public offices. John A. Harvey. marl7 Vm. Seibert. llAISIMVAItli, Ac. BUTTLES & RUN YON, Importers of Foreign Hard-ware, and Dealers in Military Goods, Iron, Nails, Glass, Saddlers' Trimmings, Tinware, Tinners' Findings, &c, &c, High street, sign ol the Gilt Pad-Lock, Columbus, Ohio. I. IV. WHITING & HUNTINGTON, BOOKSELLERS and Stationers, next door to the Clinton Bank, High street, Columbus, Ohio. A large assortment of Hooks and Slationery always on hand. JOHN WALTON, CHAIR Maker, High street, a few doors Soulh of the Mechanics' Hall. A good assortment of Chairs will always be found at this establishment. BOOKSl'OKIi AND BINHKRY. CMATTOON, Bookseller and Stationer, and Bookbinder, State slreel, opposite the Stale House. A general assortment of.Books and Stationery always on hand. Book binding of every description, executed on short notice. ISIOIIY W. UKRIIV, DEALER in Law, Theological, Classical, Miscellaneous and School Hooks ; also, Blank liooks and Slationery, opposite the State House, Columbus, Ohio. I AV &- HI I, HO I KMC, DEALERS in Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Leather, Boots and Shoes, &.C., High street, Columbus, Ohio. Oct. 1. 1841. ltl'liOV, WORK X ItWOV, DEALERS in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Carpct-peting, Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Nails, Glass, Ate, High street, opposite the Slate House, Columbus, Ohio. IIFi;S & SHELDON, FASHIONABLE TAILORS, High si., first door south of V. B. Brooks' Grocery, and directly opposite the new building of the Mechanics' Beneficial Society. IB. (JOIUSTOCK & CO. FORWARDING and Commission Merchants, and Produce Dealers, Canal Basin, Columbus, Ohio. O. W. SHERWOOU V CO., GROCERS and Produce Dealers, High street, at Burr, Gregory & Burr's old stand. All kinds of Groceries at wholesale and retail. Produce of all kinds purchased. COPPER ANI TIN WARE, Arc. GEO. J. PUG1I, Copper, Tin and Sheet Iron Ware Manufacturer, High street, near Town. A good assortment of Ware always on hand. .1. KIRGWAY & CO.'S "IPniV rniT'lHV ltrnnrl stri'nt near the Rride'e. Colum- X bus, Ohio. Stoves of all kinds, and a great variety of Castings, always on hand. Oct. 1, 1841. COI.UiTIRUS HAT STORE. JE. RUDISILL, High street, second door south of the Insurance Company's building, always keeps on hand a good assortment of Hals and Caps, of the latest fashions. Hats made to order. SOAP ANO CANIH.E FACTORY. TOHN FUNSTON. Soulh Columbus, near the New Court J House, manufactures and keeps on hand every variety of Koap and Candles, ami sells at wholesale ana reiau. WILLIAM BUKOELL, MERCHANT Tailor, in the Neil House, keeps on hand a good assortment of Cloths and Trimmings. Also, all descriptions of Clothing kept on hand, and made promptly to order. DOCTOR J. HAWLEY'S OFFICE and residence on the corner of High and Friend streets. Doct. Hawlky would receive in his office one or more students of Medicine. April 19. .dtf. t I HUH AN HOWELL, SADDLERS, Harness and Trunk Makers, High street, one door Soulh of tho Franklin Bank. Every description nf nplinlno in llllli. lillO nlulVC nn hlliul. FIRE ! THE undersigned, agent of the VElna Insurance company of Hartford, Connecticut, will insure against loss or da-maec by fire on the most liberal terms Nov. 21, 1812. .Cmd E. BACKUS. NEIL HOUSE. THE subscriber having taken the abovo House for a term of years, and furnished it in good style, flatters himself that by strict attention to the comfort of'lns guests, he will merit a share of the public patronage. . Columbus, July 1, 1842. R. B. COWLES. CORNELIUS WALKE, M. 1 TENDERS his services to the citizens of Columbus and vicinity, as Physician and Surgeon. TJ Office, on High street, Mechanics' Institute Building, up stairs. July 5, 1842. .dtf Vorwnrding, Commiion anil Produce II unities. THE subscriber will continue the Forwarding, Commission and Produce business on his own account, nt the warehouse lately occupied by Gregory, Burr & Co.; and will contract to ship Merchandise and Produce to the Eastern cities. Columbus, May 11, 1841. C. G. SHEFFIELD. STONE As TO WNSEN l, WHOLESALE and Retail Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, opposite the Franklin Bank, Columbus, Ohio. June 23, 1842. AIDS TO REFLECTION. Aids to Reflection. By Samuel Taylor Coleridge. With the Author's last Corrections. Edited by Henry Nelson Coleridge, Esq., M. A. To which is prefixed A Preliminary Essay. By John M'Vick ar, D. D., Professor of Moral Philosophy, in Columbia College. Third Edition, Revised and Corrected. 1 vol. 12mo, Price gl 25. For sale at the Borkstore of April 11. I. N. WHITING &, HUNTINGTON. AMERICAN ALMANAC for tho Year 1843, just received by dec20 I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. TJULWEll'S NEW NOVEL. Tho Lost of the 5 JJ Uarons. By Sir E. L. Bulwer, Author of " Zanom." "Rienzi," "Ernest Maltravers," "Alice," &c. Price 25 cents. This day received at DERBY'S Bookstore. . February 28 1843. BIANCA CAPPKiXO. An Historical Romance' By Lady Lyllnn Bulwer. First American Edition-complete from the London Edition. In three volumes. Just received at DERBY'S Bookstore. Feb. 6. BOOTS ANI SHOES. 25 cases Men's Calf, Kip and Thick Boots. Also 50 cases of Shoes, a general assortment. Just received and for sale by August 18. FAY, KILBOURNE & CO. BOIriNG t I.OTII. McCOY, WORK & Mc-COY have been appointed agents for the sale of genuine Het Anker Bolting Clolhs, of warranted quality, which they will sell at New York prices. July 5. BIN1EK8 ItOAHDS. 4,000 Lbs. Binders' Boardi a good article for sale cheap by BUTTLES & RUNYON, January 14. 1843. Sign of the Gill Pad-Lock. MHAKIiUS O'lHAIiliEY. Adventures of Cliasrle J Malley, the Irish Dragoon, ust received by feblO I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. DWELLING HOUSE FOll KENT. Oneofllie "Eight Buildings," on Town street, is for rent on moderate terms. It is well suited for a large boarding house. For further particulars apply at the Slate Journal counting room. April 6. D'AUISIUNE'S KEEOKITIATION. History oj the Great Reformation of the Sixteenth Century, in Germany, Switzerland. &c. By J. H. Merle D'Aubigne. A new supply just received and for sale at jan"24 DERBY'S Book Store. D It. ITIOTT'S TKAVHI.S. Travels in Europe and the East, embracing Observations ninde during a Tour llirniltrli mrtct fifth, ni mill ric nf Pnrmn ITinriil A.i. 1V11,.. &.c, &c., during the years 1834 to 1841. By Valentine Molt, M. I)., President of the Medical Faculty of the University of New York, and Professor of Surgery, &c. &c; in 1 vol.Bvo. just received and for sale by may4 I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. DRV GOODS. McCOY, WORK &. McCOY offer for sale at their old stand, opposile the State House, a large assortment of Fancy and Staple Dry Goods. Jy 5. DRUGS AND MEDICINES, OILS, PAINTS, &c The subscribers have just received a large addition to their stock of Drugs, Medicines, Oils, Paints, &c., which they olTer at wholesale and retail, on Iho most accommodating terms. aug 4 FAY, KILBOURNE & CO. FLOUR. The undersigned have made arrangements for a constant supply of the best Family Flour, which will be sold at a bare commission over cost for Cash. If charged to account 12 cents per barrel will be added to the Cash price. O. W. SHERWOOD & CO. February 17, 1813 FRESH OYSTERS, DIRECT from BALTIMORE just received at the BASEMENT OF THE AMER CAN HOTEL. Orders from the countrv, attended with the Cash, will be promptly filled. VM. KELSEY. Columbus, October 1, 1842. IRESH l'RUIT. 25 Boxes Raisins; 25 quarter do. . lo. ; just received and for sale by November 29, 1842. O. W. SHERWOOD & CO. F OR SALE Pews No. 53 in the Episcopal Church ami w m uie uaptist Clmrcii, on easy terms. October 19, 1842. B. COMSTOCK & CO. FRENCH REVOLUTION. A History of tho French Revolution. By Thomas Carly e. 2 vols. 12mo. 2d Edilion. Just received by Nov. 12. I. N. WHITING te HUNTINGTON. HAIR CUTTING. Hnir Cut nt prices to Niiil ihe times. The undersigned will try to pleaso all that mpy favor him with their custom, at his residence at the foot of Stale street, ou the Wharf. Jan. 28. D. S. DOHERTY. HAKRISON'S UIGEST, Vol. 4. Just published by the subscribers, a Digest of Cases determined in the House of Lords, the several Courts of Common Law, the Court of Bankruptcy, and also the Crown Cases Reserved 5 together with a full selection of Equity Cases, Vol.4, completing the work from 1756 to 1810. The 4th volume, or sets in 4 olumcs, for sale at moderate prices, by T. & J. W. JOHNSON, Law Booksellers, No. 5, Minor st. Philadelphia. April 28, 1842. INSURANCE. Losses by Fire or Water insured against upon liberal terms, by the long established and well known Protection Insurance Company of the city of Hartford, Connecticut. E. ROHHINS, Gen. Agent, Cincinnati. Jan. 25. M. J. GILBERT, Agent, Columbus. IMPORTANT to Merehnnt nud Traders. For sale, very cheap, at DERBY'S Bookstore, a large assortment ol Blank Work, consisting of medium, deini and cap Legcrs and Journals, bound in Russia and plain sheep; Cash, Invoice, and Day Books, in bolh full and half binding. March 24. II AMES' LAST. Forest Horn. A Romance of Old Times. By G. P. R. James, Esq., Author of " Mor-ley Ernslein," " The Jacquerie," ' The Robber," " Ancient Regime," &.c. Price 25 cents. Just received at DERHY'S Bookstore. March 4, 1843. JAMES' NEW NOVEL. The Jacquerie A Novel. By G. P. R. James, Esq., Author of " The Robber," " The Ancient Regime," etc., etc. In 2 vols. Just received at the Bookstore of Ieb7 I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. UST RECEIVER At DERRY'S Bookstore The Neighbors 1 A Story of Every Day Life By Frederi-ka Breincr. Translated by Mary Howilt. Price 25 Cents. December 10, 1842. I AIll OIL. B. Comstock & Co.'s manufacture of J Lard Oil winter strained for sale by January 14, 1843. BUTTLES &. RUNYON. AST OF THE RAIIONS 35 Cents Buhvcr's new Novel, being No. 13 of Harper's Library of Select Novels, handsomely bound in French covers, at newspaper prices, just receivea iiy mar 13 I. N. YV HITING & HUNTINGTON. LIVES of tho Queens of England, from the Norman Conquest, with anecdotes of their Courts, in 3 vols, by Agnes Stick land. Memoirs of Margaret Davidson, by Washington Irving. Poetical Remains of the late Lucrctia Maria Davidson, with a Biography, by Miss Sedgwick, 111 1 volume. For sale at the Bookstore of dec 22 I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON MARY, O.UEEN OF SCOTS. Letters and Docu nients connected with Her Personal History, now first published ; with an introduction, by Agnes Strickland, Au thor of the "Lives of the Queens of England." Price 25 cents. Sold at DERBY'S. Dec. 12, 1842. MARTIN'S BIBLE ILLUSTRATIONS A Splendid Series of Designs Illustrative of the Bible. Accompanied with passages from the Sacred Text. A truly elegant volume, folio size, elegantly bound in Cloth. For sale at DERBY'S Bookstore. Dec. 30. MACHINE CAHI. The subscribers have for sale, 50 setts Machine Cards, fancy and plain set, Nos. 30, 31, 32, 33, and 34, wire ; also, Filleting Cards ; manufactured at Leicester, Massachusetts. February 14, 1813. FAY & KILBOURNE. MEMOIRS of the queens of France; with noti ces of die Royal Favorites. By Mrs. Forbes Bush. Complete from the London Edition, in two volumes. Price 31 cenls. Sold at DERBY'S Bookstore. December 21, 1842. MESMERISM. Facts in Mesmerism, with reasons for a dispassionate enquiry into it. By the Rev. Chauncy Hare Townshend, A. M. A new supply at Ihe Bookstore of Nov. 3. I. N. WHITING &, 'HUNTINGTON. ILL AND CROSS-CUT SAWS. FAY, KILBOURNE & CtX keep a constant supply of Row-land's Mill and Cross-Cut Saws, at the lowest prrcos. jun8 NAILS AND GLASS. FAY, KILBOURNE & CO. have for sale 200 kegs Juniata Nails ; 200 boxes 8 by 10 and 10 by 12 Glass. They also keep a constant supply of the larger sizes of Glass, from 10 by 14 to 16 by 22. June 8 s WAIM'S PANACEA AND VERMIFUGE For sale by fjuly 24 FAY, KILBOURNE or. CO. PORTRAIT PAINTING. WM. WAI.CUTTwill remain through the winter in Columbus. He invites the public to call and examine his specimens at his room, or Town street. North side, first brick East of High street. December 19, 1812. .llf. PETERS' KEPORTS. The 16th volume of Peters' Reports bding cases argued and adjudged in the Supreme Court of tbe United States, January Term, 1842 for sale by 1. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. December 3, 112. I1EMOVAL.-0 W. SHERWOOD has removed to A. the Store lately occupied by the firm of Gregory, Burr & Co., on High street, 2 doors South of the Franklin Bank. April 5, 18f2. STORY ON PARTNERSHIP. Commentaries on the Law of Paitnership as a branch of Commercial and Maratime Jurisprudence with occasional illustrations from the Civil and Foreign Law. By Joseph Story, L. L. D. Just received and for sale by t T. & J. W. JOHNSON, Philadelphia, Jan.7, 1842. .dtf. No. 5 Minor street. TEPIIENS' NEW WORK. Incidents of Travel in Yucatan, by John L. Stephens, author of Incidents of Travel in Central Ami, ica, Chiapas, and Yucatan, illustrated by 120 engravings in iwo larji; vols., just received by april 18 1. Ni WHITING &. HUNTINGTON. STORV ON PARTNEKS9IIP. Commentaries on the Law of partnership as a branch of Commercial and Maratime Jurisprudence with occasional illustrations from the Civil and Foreign Law. By Joseph Story, L. L. D. 1 vol. 8vo. Just received and for sale by Dec. 3. I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. STEPHENS' NEW WOKIt. Incidents of Travel in Vucatan. By John L. Stevens, author of Incidents of Travel in Ccnlral America, Chiapas and Yucatan, etc. Illustrated by 120 engravings. In two largo volumes, This day received at DEKBY'S BOOKSTORE. April 5. THE CUPOLA, or Rhymes on IemngoKes and Politicians : Part First ; written by a retired Politician, and edited by Erasmus Evergreen, Esq. Just published and for sale at the Bookstore of January 12, 1843. HENRY W. DERBY. THE NAUTILI'S. Select Nautical Tales and Sea Sketches, with an authentic narrative of Ihe mutiny on the Somcrs. Just received and sold at DERBY'S Bookstore. January lfi, 1813. TANNERS' J L.-quality, for sale by October 2. -25 bbls. Tanners' Oil, of the best FAY, KILBOURNE & CO. THE ARAMS' LETTERS. Letters of Mrs. Adams, wife of John Adams ; with an Introductory Memoir. By her grandson, Charles Francis Ada-ins. 2vols.l2mo. Also, the Letters of John Adams addressed to his wife. By the same. 2 vols. 12mo. For sale at the Bookstore of Nov. 12. I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. TOWN LOTS. For sale or lease for a term of years, filly very desirable Lots in the City of Columbus. Enquire of mar 10 BRUSH & GILBERT. w ING ANR WING Cooper's Last Novel, in 2 vol limes, for 50 cents. Waverly Novels neatly put up at 25 cents each. Vivian Grey- &c, at the same price. Just received by Dec. 31. I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. WHEAT WANTEB. The subscribers will pay the highest market price for Wheat, delivered at their Ware-House int city of Columbus. Jluy 29, -1842. II. COMSTOCK & CO. WINTER STRAINER LAMP OIL. Fay, Kil-boure & Co. have for sale 400 gallons ofwinter strained Lamp Oil. Oct. 13, 1841. WHEAT WANTED. .10,000 Bushels of Wheat wanted, for which the highest market price, in specie paying funds, will be paid, by SALMON THOMAS. July 18. 18l2..wlf. A C BBLS. Camwood ; 30 Bbls. Logwood ; 41U 30 " Fustic; 20 " Nic'wood; fi " Alum; 6 " Copperas; 2000 lbs. Madder ; 300 lbs. Indigo ; 11X10 " Blue Vitriol, Oil Vitriol, and Clothiers' Press Papers for sale by FAY, KILBOURNE & CO THE Complete Census of Ohio for 1S40, in connection with the Oiiio Gazetteer, and Traveler's Guide. This edition of the Ohio Gazetteer contains a full description of the several Towns, Townships, and Counties, with their Water Courses, Roads, Improvements, Mineral productions, &c., etc. ; together with an Appendix or General Kegisler, embracing Tables of Roads and Distances, of Post Offices, their location and distance from the Capital of the slate, auci ol the United states; ol Works ol internal improvement; of the several Officers of the Slate, their residence, &c: of the Colleges, and their officer" of linuiu their officers and capital, oVc , ice Revised Edition. With a second Appendix, conlaininr the full Census ol the State for 1840, as taken by order of Congress; in one very large super royal lmo. volume ol 01U pages. The following is one among the numerous favorable notice which have been irivcn of this edition of the Gazetlecr : " The above is the title of a very valuable duodecimo work of 578 pages, a good idea of which may be gathered from the title. Mr. Jenkins has made the best use of the first rate fa- ...i.:..u ... nir..-.l., 1,;... n, ,l. ti..i ' r!n..n...mn..i uiliiius wiuii! ntic oiiuiiku 111111 at uiv otm in v.u v 1.1 111111.11., and has produced a Gazetteer far superior, both generally and particularly, to any other wc have ever seen pertaining to an individual'Slate. Every teacher, lawyer, physician, larmer, mechanic or mcrchanj. should provicfc himself with a copy, and use it as he would his watch, as his business requires. The Appendix alone is worth the price of the whole work, for the valuable statistics it contains." For sale, by the dozen or single copy, nt the Bookstore of dec22 I. N. WHITING & HUNTINGTON. DR. GOODE'S CELEBRATED FEMALE PILLS. These pills arc strongly recommended to the notice of the Ladies as a safe and eflicienl remedy in remov ing those complaints peculiar to their sex, Irom want ol i.xcr-cisc, or general Debility of the System, Obstructions, Suppressions, and Irregularity of the Menses ; at Ihe same time strengthening, cleansing, and giving tone to the Stomach and Bowels, and producing a new and healthy action throughout the system generally. They create Appetite, correct Indigestion, remove Giddiness and Nervous Headache, and are eminently useful in those Flatulent Complaints which distress 1-emales so much at me " 1 urn of L.1FE. ' 1 licy olivialc Costivcuess, and counteract all Hysterical and Nervous Affections, likewise afford soothing and permanent relief in Fluor Albus, or Whites, and in the most obstinate cases ot Chlorosis, or Green sickness, they invariably restore the pal lid and delicate female to health and vigor. These Pills have gained the sanction and approbation of the most eminent Physicians in the United States, and many mothers can imewisc testily to tneir extraoruinary cnicacy, To marnea lemaies, wnose expectations oi me tencieresi pieog. es of connubial happiness have been defeated, these Pills may be truly esteemed a blissful boon. They soon renovate all functional debility, and if taken, (according to directions,) obviate all morbid action. A medium thus safe and efficacious, will be found in DR. GOODE'S CELEBRATED FEMALE PILLS. These Pills are of Iwo kinds, namely: No. 1, or Laxative Pills, and No. 2, or Restorative Pills. They are for all the following diseases : suppression, Irregularity or Retention of the Menses, Fluor Albus, Chlorosis or Green Sickness. Cos- tiveness, Gravel, Incontinence of Urine, Nervous Afl'ections, Hysterics, Prolapsus Uteri, or tailing ol the Womb, and Piles. These Pills are also particularly adapted to the male as well as the female sex, for the cure of the following diseases: Nervous Diseases, Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Bilious Diseases, and all cases of Hypochondriacism, Low Spirits, Palpitation of the Heart, Nervous Irritability, Nervous Weakness, Indigestion, Loss of Appetite, Heartburn, General Debility. Bodily Weakness or Flatulency, Headaches. Night mare, Rheumatism, Asthma, Tic Douloureux, Cramp, Spasmodic Affections, and those who are victims to that most excruciating disorder Gout; also, Pains in the Side,Chost, Limbs, Head, Stomach or Back, Dimness or Confusion of Sight, Alternate flushes of Heat and Chilliness, Tremors, Watchings, Aguauon, Anxiety, oaa ureunis snu opasms. This Medicine is acknowledged to be one of the most valua ble ever discovered, as a purifier of the blood and fluids. It is superior to Sarsaparilla, whether as a sudorific or alterative, The above valuable medicine is for sale by J. B. WH EATON, FAY &, KILBOURNE, and DENIG & SON, Columbus, Ohio. rebruary Sio, 1B. Woman nnd Marriage By Washington Irving. I have speculated a great deal upon matrimony. I have seen young and beautiful women, the pride of gay circles, married as the world says well ! Some have moved into costly houses, and their friends have all come and looked at their furniture, and their splendid arrangement for happiness, and they have gone away and committed them to their sunny hopes cheerfully without fear. It is natural for the young to be sanguine, and at such times I am carried away by similar feelings. I love to get unobserved into a corner, and watch the bride in her white attire and with her smiling face and her soft eyes moving before me in the pride of life, weave a waking dream of her future happiness, and persuade myself that it will be true. I think how they will sit upon the luxurious sofa, as the twilight falls, and build gay hopes and murmur in love tones the now unforbidden tenderness, and how thrillingly the allowed kiss, and the beautiful endearments of wedded life, will make even that parting joyous, and how gladly they will come back from the crowd and the empty mirth of the gay to each other's quiet company. I picture to myself that young creature, who blushes even now, at his hesitating caress, listening eagerly for his foot steps as the night steals on, and wishing that he would come, and when he enters at last, and with an affection as undying as his pulse, folds her to his arms, I can feel the very tide flowing through his heart, and gaze with him on her graceful form, as she moves about him for the kind offices of affection, soothing all his unquiet cares, and making him forget even himself, in her young and unshadowing beauty. I go forward for years, and see her luxuriant hair put soberly away from her brow, and her girlish graces ripen into dignity, and her bright loveliness chastened with the gentle meekness of maternal affection. Her husband looks on her with a proud eye, and shows her the same fervent love and delicate attention which first won her; and children are growing up about them, and go on full of honor and untroubled years, and are remembered when they die ! I say I love to dream thus when I go to give the young bride joy. It is the natural tendency of feeling touched by loveliness, that fears nothing for itself, and if ever I yield to darker feelings, it is because the light of the picture is changed. I am not fond of dwelling upon such changes, and I will not, minutely, now. I allude to it only because I trust that my simple pnge will be read by some of the young and beautiful beings who move daily across my path, and I would whisper to them, as they glide by, joyously and confidently, the secret of an unclouded future. The picture I have drawn above is not peculiar. It is colored like the fancies of the bride ; and many, oh ! many an hour will she sit, with her jewels lying loose in her fingers, and dream such dreams as these. She believes them, too and she goes on for a w hile, undeceived. The evening is not too long while they talk of plans for happiness, and the quiet meal is still pleasant with the delightful novelty of mutual reliance and attention. There comes soon, however, a time when personal topics become bare and wearisome, and slight attentions will not alone keep up the social excitement. There are long intervals of silence, and detected symptoms of weariness, and the husband, first, in his manhood, breaks in upon the hours they were to spend together. I cannot follow it circumstantially. Then comes long hours of unhappy restlessness, and terrible misgivings of each other's worth and affection, till, by and by, they can conceal their uneasiness no longer, and go out separately to seek relief, and lean upon a hollow world for the support which one who was their lover and friend could not give them ! Heed this, ye who are winning by your innocent beauty, the affections of high minded and thinking beings! Remember that he will giveupthebiother of his heart with whom he has had, ever, a fellowship of mind the society of his cotemporary runners in the race of fame, who have held him with a stern companionship and often, in his passionate love, will break away from the arena of his burning ambition, to come to listen to the " voice of the charmer." It will bewilder him at first, but it will not be long, and then think you that an idle bland ishment will chain the mind that has been used, tor years, to equal communication ? Think you he will give up, for a weak dalliance the animated themes of men, and the search into the mysteries of knowledge! Oh! no, lady! believe me no! Trust not your influence to such light fetters! Credit not the old fashioned absurdity, that woman's is a secondary lot ministering to the necessities of her lord and master! It is a higher destiny that I would award vou. If your immortality is as complete and your gift of mind is as capable as ours, 1 would put no wisdom of mine against "God's allotment. I would charge you to water the undying bud, and give it a healthy culture, and open its beauty to the sun, and then you may hope that when your life is bound with another, you will go on equally, and in a fellowship that shall pervade every earthly interest. I)ciiNC not Small Beginnings. It is related in the Gentlemen's Magazine, of (Jhantry, the celebrated sculptor, that, when a boy, he was observed by a gentleman in the neighborhood of Sheffield, very attentively engaged in cutting a stick with a penknife. Ho asked the lad what he was doing : when, with great simplicity of manner, but with courtesy, he replied, "I am cutting old Fox s head, rox was the schoolmaster of the vil lage. On this, the gentleman asked to see what he had done; and pronounced it to be an excellent likeness, and presented the youth with a sixpence. And this may be reckoned the first money Chantry ever received for the production ot his art. This anecdoto is but one of a thousand that might be cited of many different men, who, from small be-ciiininirs, rose to irreat stations and influence, and shows the importance of not despising the day of small things, in any condition or circumstances ot lite. All nature, in tact, is mil or insiruciive lessons on this point, which it would be well for us more thorourrhlv to study and appreciate. The river, rolling onward its accumulated waters to the ocean, was, in its small beginning, out an ooz ing rill, trickling down a small moss-covered rock, and windinir, like a silver thread, between the green banks to which It imparted verdure. The tree, that sweeps the air with its hundred branches, and mocks at the howling tempest, was, in its small beginning, but a little seed, trodden under toot and unnoticed then a small shoot, that the leaping hare might have forever crushed. Evcrvthine around us tells us not to despise small beginnings ; tor they are the lower rounds ot a lad der that leads to great results, and we must step upon these before we can ascend higher. Despise not small beginnings of wealth. The Rothschilds, Girard, Astor, and most of the richest men, began with small means. From cents, they proceeded to dollars ; from hundreds to thousands; from thousands to millions. Had they neglected these first earnings had they said within themselves, what is the use of saving these few cents? they are not of much value, and I will just spend them, and enjoy myself as I go they would never have risen to the wealthiest among their fellows. It is only by the economical husbanding of small means that they increase to large sums. It is the hardest part of success to gain a little ; that little once gained, more will easily follow. Despise not small beginnings of education. Franklin had but little early education ; yet look at what he became, and how he is now reverenced. Ferguson feeding his sheep on the hills of Scotland, picked up merely the rudiments of learning, but subsequently arose to be one of the first astronomers in 1'iurope. tlerschcl, also, the great astronomer, was in his youth a drummer boy to a marching regiment, and received but little more than a drummer boy's education ; but his name is now associated with tho brightest discoveries of science, and is borne by the planet which his zeal discovered. A host of in stances rise up to testify that, by properly improving the small and perhaps imperiect beginnings ol knowledge, they may become as foundation stones of a temple of learning, which the future shall gaze upon and admire. A man can scarcely be too avaricious in the ac quisition of knowledge; he should hoard up his in tellectual gains with the utmost assiduity and diligence ; but, unlike the lucre-seeking miser, must put out his knowledge to usury, and, by lending out his stock to others, increase by this commerce of his thought, his capital, until his one talent shall have become five, and his five have gained to them other five. Despise not the small beginings of fame or honor. The fame which springs up on a sudden, like the mushroom plant, is seldom lasting. True fame and honor are of slow, but generally sure growth, ascending by degrees from the lowest offices to the highest stations from the regard of a few, to the applause of a nation. But he who despises the lower steps of honor, because they are low, will seldom reach the higher; and he who spurns at the commendations of his own circle, as too small a thing to seek after, will never secure the esteem and renown of a Slate or a kingdom. Despise not small beginnings of error. The walls of a castle have been undermined by the burrowing of small and despised animals; and the beginning of error, though at first unheeded, will soon, if not checked, sap the foundations of truth, and build up his own wretched dogmas on its ruins. All first errors are small ; despise them not, they will soon increase to great ones, and perhaps devastate soeiety. Savannah Rep. Theory or Marriage. There was a merrv fel low who supped with Plato three thousand years ago, and the conversation turned upon love and the choice of wives. He said, "he had learned from a very early tradition that man was created male and female, wan a uupucaie sei oi nmos, ana periormea nis locomotive functions with a kind of rotary movement as a wheel; that he became in consequence so excessively insolent that Jupiter, indignant, split him in two; that since that time each runs about the world in quest of his other half; if the two congenial halves meet they are a very loving couple; otherwise they are subject to a miserable, scolding, peevish, and uncongenial matrimony. The search he said was ren dered difficult, tor the reason that one man alighted upon a half that did not belong to him, another did necessarily the same, till the whole affair was thrown into irretrievable confusion." American Watches. Our Connecticut friends have hitherto been famous for the manufacture of wooden Clocks; but from this useful business they have advanced to making Gold Lever Watches com plete, of the very best character. Our neighbor Doct. Crane has been presented with one by a friend, that really appears to be equal in workmanship and beauty to anything of the kind we ever witnessed. It is a gold detached Lever, made by Mr. John Pitkin of East Hartford, Conn, with two extrajewels. Our YValchmaKers say the movements are not excelled by any brought into this country from Europe. The business has been extensively carried on at Hartford for a year or two past, but so powerful is the prejudice C IT n 1- L IIT...I .1. . .. in iavor oi riUgusu vv atcnes, iiiai n is our, recently Mr. P. has felt encouraged to push them forward with the Hartford stamp. Cincinnati Gazette. Corn Stalk Syrup. We have before us an article of Corn Stalk Syrup, which is equal, in every respect, to the best molasses. It was left at our office by Col. John S. Thomas, of this county. The process of manufacturing, we learn, was of the simplest character. The corn stalks were cut up, beaten in a trough, and then thrown into a common cider press the juices of the stalk then underwent boiling, &c, and the syrup is thus made. Our planters without exception, should prepare to make this syrup if not for a market, at least for their own home consumption. The sample before us was made in South Carolinia. The stalks from an acre of land, it is said, will produce about 90 gallons. Milledgeville (Ga.) Journal. The Comet of 1843. M. Arago's account. The Philadelphia Inquirer publishes a translation, by Mr. W. B. Hill, of M. Arago's notice of the recent Comet. It appears according to Arago and the French astronomers, that the Comet only just grazed the Sun, and in the London Times of the 14th of April, Encke states that he has found an impossible orbit, viz: one in which the Comet would have to strike the Sun in a direction passing one third of the way to the centre.Mr. Kendall, the principal of the Philadelphia High School, and other learned gentlemen, have given the Comet a great deal of attention, and they, previous to the receipt of the report of M. Arago,s statement, had determined, by calculation, that the Comet must have hit the Sun. The coincidence of astronomers in Philadelphia, London, and Paris arriving at such a result, is certainly very strong, if not conclusive evidence. The curious circumstance of the Comet running against the Sun, and being thrown off, is a hard thing to believe. Baltimore Puiriot. It has been aptly said that a false friend is like a shadow on a dial appearing in clear weather, but vanishing as soon as it is thudy !